remote online utilization of video data for analyzing potential alarm events from an automatic alarm network includes the following. A premise-protecting control panel communicates with a sensor, providing a message in some or all cases of sensor signals. A remote receiver receives the messages of the control panel. A camera device is combined with the sensor for acquiring video data that allows further analysis into the matter of a given sensor-detected event. The camera device is configured with stateless network communication protocols and server processing to achieve network service of video data upon request. Correspondingly, the receiver is configured with compatible stateless network communication protocols and then also browser processing wherein the receiver can transmit network requests to the camera device for network service of said video data. The foregoing achieves remote online analysis of the video data in the matter of the given sensor-detected event.
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13. A method of utilizing ip telephony with premise-protecting control panels in an automatic alarm network of the type in which the control panels are configured with voice-grade aural signal processing, comprising the steps of:
providing at least one sensor on a protected premise with a signal response in cases of sensing a sensible event; providing at least one premise-protecting control panel in communication with the sensor with a message response in some or all cases of sensor signals, wherein the message response is formatted in a voice-grade aural signal format; providing a proximate network access device with a connection to the control panel and which converts the voice-grade aural signal format of the message response into a data format; providing at least one remote receiver for receiving the message traffic of the control panel; and providing a data communications network for linking at least the network access device and receiver wherein the remote receiver is linked with the control panel at least in part by communicating over the data communications network.
1. A method of remote online utilization of video data for analysis of potential alarm events in an automatic alarm system, comprising the steps of:
providing at least one sensor on a protected premise with a signal response in cases of sensing a sensible event; providing at least one premise-protecting control panel in communication with the sensor with a message response in some or all cases of sensor signals; providing at least one remote receiver for receiving the message traffic of the control panel; providing at least one camera device in combination with the sensor for acquiring video data allowing further analysis into the matter of a given sensible event; providing a communications network for linking at least the camera device and receiver; configuring the camera device with stateless network communication protocols and server processing wherein the camera device provides network service of video data upon a network request; and, configuring the receiver with compatible stateless network communication protocols and browser processing wherein a user at the receiver can transmit network requests to the camera device for network service of said video data and thereby achieve remote online analysis of the video data in the matter of the given sensible event.
7. A method of remote online utilization of video data for analysis of potential alarm events in an automatic alarm system of the type having:
at least one sensor on a protected premise which has a signal response in cases of sensing a sensible event, at least one premise-protecting control panel in communication with the sensor which has a message response in some or all cases of sensor signals, at least one remote receiver for receiving the message traffic of the control panel, at least one camera device in combination with the sensor for acquiring video data allowing further analysis into the matter of a given sensible event, and a communications network for linking at least the camera device and receiver, wherein the camera device is configured with stateless network communication protocols and server processing such that the camera device provides network service of video data upon a network request, said method comprising the steps of:
configuring the receiver with compatible stateless network communication protocols and browser processing wherein a user at the receiver can transmit network requests to the camera device for network service of said video data and thereby achieve remote online analysis of the video data in the matter of the given sensible event.
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/194,432, filed Apr. 4, 2000.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to automatic, premise-monitoring alarm systems as for example burglary or burglary/fire alarm systems, and more particularly to network and circuit configurations for alarm system operations as will be apparent in connection with the discussion further below of preferred embodiments and examples.
2. Prior Art
Premise-monitoring alarm systems monitor a given protected premise--say, for example, a residential home, a commercial property, a bank vault, or an ATM machine and the like--for the occurrence of a given alarm event:--e.g., an unwanted intrusion, unauthorized entry or smoke and so on. Some alarm events simply correspond to a "low battery" condition in either the alarm-event sensors or else the protected-premise controller/control panel. Upon detection of a given alarm event, the controller signals the alarm event to a pre-determined receiving site(s), which traditionally has been a central alarm-monitoring station. In the traditional case, the central alarm-monitoring station, which may be a public or private service, may manually process the signal by an attendant who can dispatch police or fire-fighters or alert the property-owners or take whatever other steps are appropriate. Prior art automatic alarm systems have typically transmitted their message traffic over standard voice-grade telephone lines.
The upper half of
At event no. 1, the door opens. The motion sensor 62 detects this event. It signals the controller 60 over a copper wire connection 74. At event no. 2, the controller has started its response. The controller sends a control signal to the local VTR 76 over copper wire 78 to begin recording. The local VTR 76 responds to the control signal and switches ON, however the VTR 76 is linked to the camera by co-axial cable 78. The controller 60 concurrently counts out its pre-set delay time. That is, authorized users might be given twenty (20) seconds to get through the door 54 and over to the controller 60 to enter a password or code. Without a timely entry of an authorized password or code, the controller at event no. 4 signals the guard shack of the prospective alarm event. The link between the controller and guard shack might be achieved by a standard voice grade telephone line 80.
At event no. 5, the guard switches into the channel of this camera. To tune into this camera 52, the guard shack switch must have a co-axial link 82/78 extending directly back all the way to the camera 52 (more accurately, there is a hop at the local VTR 76). Indeed, the switch might be fed the co-axial infeeds of dozens if not hundreds of other cameras. Again, such other infeeds are indicated by reference numeral 72. Logistically, such an expansive grid of co-axial cable 72/78/82 represents substantial resources in installation and maintenance. By event no. 6, the guard begins his or her analysis of the situation, including by transmitting instructions to the camera vis-a-vis the controller, such as pan, zoom, or tilt and so on (hereinafter more simply referenced as PZT). Event no. 7 et seq. show that further analysis continues, with the controller 60 relaying the guard's instructions to the camera. The guard has likely begun recording with the guard shack VTR 66 as well.
There are various shortcomings associated with the prior art configuration(s) of combined alarm monitoring and video surveillance. Installing and maintaining the co-axial cable is costly. Preferably, the guard shack is rather centrally located among the distributed cameras. Cost factors in many cases limit the serviceable distance between the guard shack and any of its cameras it services. There is little economy in having one guard shack in a region service diverse remote properties. The logistics of carrying video signals over co-axial cable virtually proscribe one guard shack per property. Also, once a guard shack site has been chosen, and wired up, it is costly to change that choice and move the guard shack. It is also costly to establish a redundant site(s) as for either back-up purposes or joint analysis purposes by users at various ones of the remote sites simultaneously.
Also, the video data travels over special co-axial cables whereas the command signals travel over other hardwired paths, but not the co-axial cables. Hence there are redundant paths extending between the camera and most devices it feeds video to and/or receives commands from.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to overcome these and other shortcomings of the prior art and provide improved networks and circuits for alarm system operations. Additional aspects and objects of the invention will be apparent in connection with the discussion further below of preferred embodiments and examples.
It is an object of the invention to provide remote online utilization of video data for analysis of potential alarm events.
It is another object of the invention to merge IP telephony with premise-protecting control panels that only have voice-grade aural signal communication ability.
It is an alternate object of the invention to provide remote consolidated printer services to a distributed community of premise-protecting control panels.
It is an additional object of the invention to provide remote panel programming capability from anywhere a network connection can be made and thereby service any of the distributed community of premise-protecting control panels.
It is yet another object of the invention to provide a 2-way radio link between a given battery-powered alarm-event sensor and a given premise-protecting control panel in order to cut down the signal emissions from the sensor and thereby save the drain on battery power.
These and other aspects and objects are provided according to the invention in a method of remote online utilization of video data for analysis of potential alarm events in an automatic alarm system. This last-mentioned method comprising aspects of the following. At least one sensor is provided on a protected premise with a signal response in cases of sensing a sensible event. At least one premise-protecting control panel is in communication with the sensor and provided with a message response in some or all cases of sensor signals. At least one remote receiver is provided for receiving the message traffic of the control panel.
An inventive aspect relates to providing at least one camera device in combination with the sensor for acquiring video data allowing further analysis into the matter of a given sensible event. A communications network allows linking at least the camera device and receiver for communications. The camera device is configured with stateless network communication protocols and server processing wherein the camera device provides network service of video data upon a network request. Correspondingly, the receiver is configured with compatible stateless network communication protocols and then also browser processing wherein a user at the receiver can transmit network requests to the camera device for network service of said video data. The foregoing achieves remote online analysis of the video data in the matter of the given sensible event.
Preferably the stateless network communication protocols can be chosen from open protocols including HTTP. That way, the communications network may include at least in part the Internet. This method of online utilization of video data allows a plurality of remote user sites to link up to the network and thereby request network service of the video data by communicating at least in part over the Internet. The network requests submitted by the receiver (or any of the remote users) can include pan, zoom and tilt instructions. The camera and sensor may either be different devices or the same device.
Additional aspects and objects of the invention will be apparent in connection with the discussion further below of preferred embodiments and examples.
There are shown in the drawings certain exemplary embodiments of the invention as presently preferred. It should be understood that the invention is not limited to the embodiments disclosed as examples, and is capable of variation within the scope of the appended claims. In the drawings,
The control panel, camera and the remote receiving sites 105-08 can be linked up in various configurations including what may be referred to as inter-networking. The term "inter-networking" has apparently evolved to encompass the networking of networks, including where one such network might be the Internet global computer network.
Video surveillance is achieved by the digital camera unit 104, such as what are available from for example, SONY® and others. The digital camera unit comprises a charge-coupled device (CCD) 110 feeding a digital signal processor, identified as video signal processing 112 in the drawing. The camera unit incorporates a processor 114 with memory for various processing functions described more particularly as follows. The camera unit also includes a "mass" storage device 116 which, despite being generically referred to as "mass," may provide only a modest amount of storage capacity. The mass storage device may comprise one (or just a portion of one) chip, or alternatively multiple chips, or else perhaps a local disk or drive. The mass storage device provides for storage of server and communication software, and perhaps optionally for database storage of limited amounts of video data. The camera unit can be linked to a network by the provision of a network card 118 or the like, and also has various output functions 120 including significantly, the drives for the pan, zoom, tilt (PZT) functions.
The inventive control panel is shown in an abbreviated format. What is shown includes a processor and memory 122, a network card 124, an interface and card 126 for processing sensor signals, as well as its own mass storage device 128. The control panel's mass storage device likewise provides storage for programming including browser software as well as providing storage for data. Additionally, the mass storage device provides storage for server software as will be more particularly described below in connection with FIG. 4. Whereas the mass storage aspect is again referred to as a "device," it might actually be realized as a set of chips instead of a single (or portion of one) chip, or else a disk or drive (or tape and so on).
An inventive aspect of this
What the drawing shows as a LAN segment 123 might more simply represent one entire LAN. However, denoting the LAN segment 123 as such a segment 123 accommodates clustering. For example, if this LAN segment is owned by a geographically distributed banking enterprise, the bank might distribute its inter-networking configuration to cluster together certain sub-units of its operation. That is, a given bank lobby and its proximate ATM machines (not shown) might be networked by the LAN segment 123 as shown, the larger banking enterprise within a metropolitan area might tie in several LAN segments into one LAN (eg., 122), the bank's LAN's across the nation being networked together in a WAN (ie., wide area network, again, 122), all which might interface at several points with the Internet global computer network 121.
The camera unit 104 is provided with server-implemented communication abilities. The control panel 102 is provided with complementary browser-implemented communication abilities. Briefly stated, the camera and browser can communicate with each other over the network 121-23. Also, since the video data is digital, the video data can likewise travel over the network 121-23 rather than over special co-axial cables. Hence both the video data as well as message data travel over the same pathway, ie., the network paths 121-23. Moreover, the control panel can store a certain amount of the video data onboard in its own mass storage device 128. The control panel 102 need not have a video tape recorder. A further advantage is that the control panel can be provided with analysis software that captures frames, and then perhaps "analyzes" or compares an earlier to a frame for differences, ie., which corresponds to motion detection analysis.
Referring back to the event table of
This
More to the point, there are thousands upon thousands of control panels already in existence, installed and in use around the country that operate predominantly by means of standard voice-grade aural communications, whether actually transmitted over landlines or by cellular links. Commonly-owned, commonly-invented U.S. Pat. No. 6,040,770--Britton, and its co-pending continuation, U.S. application Ser. No. 09/524,166, filed Mar. 13, 2000, discloses various schemes of integrity supervision for alarm data communication. In the ordinary case, such alarm data communication is formatted for voice-grade aural communications, whether by landlines, cellular links or other long-range radio links.
The control panel 132 is connected to a router device 136 which includes interfaces 138 for voice-grade aural transmissions. This router device 136 is further of the type that implements IP telephony. Such routers are provided by many OEM's including by way of non-limiting example the products of Cisco Systems, Inc., which utilize the Cisco AVVID architecture (ie., architecture for voice, video and integrated data). See, for example, http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/779/largeent/avvid/products/infrastructure.html.
That way, the alarm data communication over the network 121-23 can dispense with the control panel 132's network card 124 and rely instead on the connections out of the control panel 132 from the public-telephone-network interface 140. Instead of plugging into the public telephone network, the control panel 132 is linked to the telephony ports 138 on the voiceover IP router 136 by a phone wire 142 out of the public-telephone-network interface 140. A remote user 108 having a browser can communicate over the Internet with the control panel 132, all as by means of IP telephony. Hence, the aural transmissions of the control panel 132 are in fact transmitted over the Internet 121 in browser format. However, the remote user 108's browser software decodes the browser format back into aural transmission format. Hence the remote user 108's machine can utilize the integrity supervision protocols disclosed by the above-referenced patent disclosure(s) of Britton.
Hence the
Also, the
The control panel 152 shown by
To return to the matter of control panel programming, the control panel 152 is configured with server software as well as browser software. The prior art way of programming a control panel has involved the following. Perhaps a laptop computer (not shown) was brought to the control panel and connected to it by a serial port. The producer/manufacturer of the control panel might likely provide proprietary software for programming the control panel. Such proprietary software would be installed on the laptop. From the laptop, a user would program the control panel. Control panel programming would address the following matters. For example, with reference to
An inventive aspect of the
As well understood by those skilled in the art, computers communicating over the World Wide Web ("Web") do so by browser technology and in an environment described as a "stateless" or non-persistent protocol. "Intranet" generally refers to private networks that likewise implement browser technology. "Internet" generally includes the Web as well as sites operating not on browser-technology but perhaps maybe servers of mail or Internet chat and the like. At least in the case of the Web, the stateless protocol is denominated as Hypertext Transfer Protocol ("HTTP").
One premise of the Web is that material on the Web may be formatted in open or "public domain" formats. These principally include to date for Web-page matter the languages or formats of HTML (hypertext markup language), SGML (standard generalized markup language), XML (extensible markup language), XSL (extensible style language), or CSS (cascading style sheets). Many if not most of these open formats are produced under the authority of W3C, which is short for World Wide Web Consortium, founded in 1994 as an international consortium of companies involved with the Internet and the Web. The organization's purpose is to develop open standards so that the Web evolves in a single direction rather than being splintered among competing factions. The W3C is the chief standards body for HTTP and HTML and so on.
On the Web, all information requests and responses presumptively conform to one of those standard protocols. Another premise of the Web is that communications vis-a-vis requests and responses are non-persistent. A request comprises a discrete communication which when completed over a given channel is broken. The response thereto originates as a wholly separate discrete communication which is afforded the opportunity to find its way to the requestor by a very different channel.
In general, in cases if the client is any of the parties 105 through 108 of
requests the server's data on the prospective alarm event,
performs observation and analysis activity, and
enters results of the analysis.
More particularly, the CPU of the client (eg. guard shack 105 and/or any of the other alarm-monitoring parties 106-108 of
connect to server/camera,
accept keystrokes/mouse inputs (ie., there from the client's machine),
analyze for forming a request,
transmit the request to the server/camera,
receive the First-stage Object and referenced DLLs,
receive the requested data,
execute the Second stage compile/interpretation of the object and referenced DLL'S,
develop the screen and screen content
display the developed screen,
accept further keystrokes/mouse inputs (again, from the client's machine),
analyze keystrokes/mouse inputs, and
either
build another different screen,
or Transmit a request to server/camera for additional Data and First stage objects and DLL references, and so on continuing the process.
All of the above example could be executed with two or three requests to the Server CPU (depends on program design). All the above activity preferably takes place within the Client CPU. That way, the server gets by on operating on a limited operating system and other programming functionality/instruction set.
However, as stated, to date there has only been one-way transmission from the sensor to the control panel. Thus, the state of matters may be referred to as one-way wireless transmission in a battery-operated unit. An advantage of this includes that such battery-operated sensors are miniature and can be placed in the most hidden away locations.
A disadvantage has been found with the following. The greatest drain on the battery occurs with transmission. The present preferred mode of one-way transmission has the sensor sending its signal perhaps as many as twenty (20) times in a row to insure that the control panel received the signal.
The invention 1003 in accordance with what is disclosed by
Thus two-way transmission provides multiple advantages. For one, the control panel 172 can feed back the sensor 171 a "received" signal 178 when indeed a sensor's signal 179 is received. The "received" signal 178 can signify the sensor 171 to stop. That way, the sensor 171 need not re-transmit a signal 179 twenty (20) times in a row blindly, not ever knowing if the control panel 172 got the signal 179 on the first transmission, if at all. Presumptively, the control panel 172 will indeed receive the signal 179 in the first set of transmissions or so. Hence the sensor 171 will be stopped from wasting its battery power on many redundant needless transmissions of signal 179. Consequently, this will prolong the use life of the battery 170.
Furthermore, the control panel 172 can download various programming instructions to the sensor 171. For example, the control panel 172 might instruct the sensor 171, as in pseudo-code, `front door sensor 171, we are disarmed until notified next` (eg., for the duration of business hours or the next nine (9) hours or so). Then later, the control panel 172 would likely re-instruct the sensor 171, again in pseudo-code, `front door sensor 171, we are now armed, so check-in on a regular schedule of every ten (10) minutes.` No doubt the nine (9) hours of downtime saves the life of the battery 170. Alternatively, the control panel 172 might recite to a different sensor (no other sensor shown, although various other radio links 180 are shown), `you are afire detector, so call back with a check-in message each minute.` Those are just examples of the various matters likely to be addressed between the control panel 172 and its dependent sensors 171.
Therefore, the two-way wireless transmission both provides the control panel 172 with more intelligent management of its dependent sensors 171's battery resources.
The invention having been disclosed in connection with the foregoing variations and examples, additional variations will now be apparent to persons skilled in the art. The invention is not intended to be limited to the variations specifically mentioned, and accordingly reference should be made to the appended claims rather than the foregoing discussion of preferred examples, to assess the scope of the invention in which exclusive rights are claimed.
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